Strengthening national notification systems of TB cases...WHO Global Task Force on TB Impact...

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Strengthening national

notification systems of TB casesAn overview of progress

Babis Sismanidis

(GTB/TME)

Strategic and Technical Advisory Group for TBSTAG-TB 2017

Glion, 1 May 2018

WHO Global Task Force on TB Impact Measurement

Surveillance of TB cases and deathsstrong systems to understand the epidemic, target

action and track progress

Who (risk factors),

where (subnational)

solid line = TB cases

dashed line = TB deaths

Priority topics identified during the last TF meeting

1. National TB epidemiological reviews

– Surveillance checklist of standards and

benchmarks

2. Transitioning from paper to electronic

3. TB inventory studies

4. Regional and national analysis workshops

National TB epidemiological

reviews

+ TB surveillance checklist

What are national TB epidemiological reviews?

• Standardised terms of reference (since early 2013)

– V 2.0 under review

• Four objectives, with suggested analytical tasks per

objective:

1. Quality & coverage of the TB surveillance

and VR systems (surveillance checklist)

2. Level of, and trends in, TB burden

3. Within-country analysis: who is affected (“key” populations),

which areas (subnational analyses)

4. Investment framework to address gaps in surveillance and M&E

Assessment of TB surveillance

Analysis of TB and other data

Programme review, M&E plan

National strategic plan

Investment plan for surveillance and M&E to address gaps

Domestic and international resource allocation

Results

What are they used for?Identify and address gaps in surveillance and M&E

Global progress, epidemiological reviews 69 countries* so far

* 23 countries have conducted a repeat assessment.

* 17 reviews planned for 2018

Capacity building35 local and international consultants/NTP staff

Training workshops and “shadowing”

• April 2016, Crete, Greece: 12 new consultants

• Throughout 2017, West Africa (WARN-TB workplan): 9 NTP staff

• May 2018, Geneva, Switzerland (GF workshop): 6 new

consultants

• September 2018, Kigali, Rwanda: 10-20 new consultants focusing

on African and francophone epidemiologists

• Implementation document and training material are available

(English & French)

TB surveillance checklist Standards & associated benchmarks

Results, TB surveillance checklist24/30 high TB burden countries (+3 planned in 2018)

Results, TB surveillance checklistGlobal progress, total number of standards met (out of 13)

Results, TB surveillance checklistGlobal progress, number of data quality standards met (out of 7)

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

GhanaMadagascar

IndonesiaEthiopia

MyanmarLesotho

BotswanaEgypt

PhilippinesNigeriaZambia

ZimbabwePakistan

SwazilandRwanda

Kenya

Number of standards

Met Better No Change in those not previously met Worse

Countries with repeat epidemiological reviewsmonitoring progress in strengthening TB surveillance

“Worse”/ “no change” primarily due to transition from paper to electronic,

2013 RR framework, standards outside NTP control, self-assessment

Most common recommendations

• Transition from paper to electronic case-

based surveillance – Compile and safeguard sub-national data from

previous years (e.g. quarterly reporting forms)

• Measure and address under-reporting of

TB cases

• Strengthen national vital registration

system

• Build capacity to analyse and use TB data

Transitioning from paper to

electronic surveillance for TB

Global status*progress with national electronic, case-based, TB surveillance

* Based on global data collection, regional workshops and

national epidemiological reviews

Type of surveillance system,

by WHO region

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

AFR AMR EMR EUR SEA WPR

Paper

Transition from paper toelectronic

Web-based electronic system(aggregate data)

Case-based (MDR-TB patients)

Case-based (All TB patients)

Prioritization for regional data

analysis and use workshops

• Collaboration of governments, international agencies, donors, academia

• Improve availability and use of quality data, build capacity, track progress towards SDGs

• 11 time-limited working group (2016-2017)– Routine health facility data, facility and household surveys,

community data, LMIS, measuring quality of care, CRVS, data analytics and use, digital health & interoperability, health workforce accounts, health financing

• Global and country-level deliverables for each working group

https://www.healthdatacollaborative.org

Example global deliverables

1. Standardized data entry forms

• 2006 and 2013 RR frameworks

2. Dashboards

3. Filters to review data across different admin levels

• Comparisons (e.g. by province, by district)

4. In-built GIS mapping capacity

WHO TB platform developed to compile, safeguard, visualize aggregated subnational TB data

With: University of Oslo, Health Data Collaborative, Global Fund

Subnational data currently stored on https://tbhistoric.org

Demo account, Benin data

user name: Demo2017 password: Ben!n2017

Country implementation of DHIS2 TB moduleWith: University of Oslo, Health Data Collaborative, WHO HIV TB Malaria HIS, Global Fund

Pilot planned in Lao PDR

WHO TB case-based module With: University of Oslo, Health Data Collaborative, Global Fund

https://who.dhis2.net/

National TB inventory studies

Global progress, national TB

inventory studies

Indonesia

Pakistan

Viet Nam

Studies currently ongoing

China

South Africa

Denmark

Finland

Portugal

Slovenia

Planning to start

Philippines

Mongolia

Croatia

National TB inventory study,

Indonesia (2016-2017)

• Largest of its kind (≈ 21,000 TB cases)

• Good quality (very high participation)

• Measure of TB under-reporting

• Estimate of TB under-diagnosis

• Clear policy/programmatic implications

TB inventory studies: from periodic study to

national roll-out and routine implementation prerequisites, results and lessons learnt

• Development and use of unique IDs (deterministic matching)

• Exhaustive and up-to-date mapping of all health facilities

(master facility list)

• Successful models of engagement with different types of

health facilities

• Record linkage exercises

– De-duplication of NTP databases

– Matching with other sources of TB cases

• More robust national/subnational estimates of TB incidence

Mandatory notificationfrom legal framework to implementation

• Country examples to be shared:

– Indonesia,

– Myanmar,

– Pakistan (pilot)

Conclusion

1. National TB epidemiological reviews– Great progress with implementation and capacity building

– Some progress with strengthening surveillance systems

– Future focus: revision of ToRs, continued support to countries to accelerate progress

2. Electronic TB surveillance– Standard DHIS2 modules (aggregate and case-based) and reference

material are now available

– Strong and successful collaboration with HDC, UoO, GF established

– Great country interest for DHIS2 modules

– Future focus: in-country implementation

3. National TB inventory studies– Feasibility and importance of results has been demonstrated

(Indonesia, Pakistan and Viet Nam)

– Future focus: roll-out and routine implementation of key activities

NTPs of many countries

Acknowledgements

• Laura Anderson

• Hazim Timimi

• Tomas Matas

• Katherine Floyd

• Corinne Merle

• Philippe Glaziou

• Olav Poppe

• Knut Staring

• Eveline Klinkenberg

• Charlotte Colvin

Global progress, checklist S&B75 countries so far